Answer:
you should use possessive pronouns or add an apostrophe and the letter s (that is, 's) to the noun to indicate ownership.
Explanation:
When a noun precedes a gerund, use the possessive case of the noun.
e.g. My roommate's snoring often wakes me up.
Well a body paragraph is just like YOUR body it's just located below the head and above the waist and without it you wouldn't survive. The body is basicly the dicription of your topic sentence, whatever you know (or find out) about your topic sentence belongs in the body paragraph.
Answer:
In the song, a beggar talks back to the system that stole his job.[3] Gorney said in an interview in 1974, "I didn't want a song to depress people. I wanted to write a song to make people think. It isn't a hand-me-out song of 'give me a dime, I'm starving, I'm bitter', it wasn't that kind of sentimentality".[7] The song asks why the men who built the nation – built the railroads, built the skyscrapers – who fought in the war (World War I), who tilled the earth, who did what their nation asked of them should, now that the work is done and their labor no longer necessary, find themselves abandoned and in bread lines. Asking for an act of charity, the singer requests a dime (equivalent to $1.53 in 2019).
Explanation: PLEASE BRAINLIEST, ME!
Answer:
Peabody retells the classic myth of Icarus and Daedalus, in which a skilled inventor creates wings for him and his son, Icarus, so they can escape King Minos of Crete. Overcome by his newly acquired freedom, Icarus flies too close to the sun, resulting in his tragic end.
Explanation: